Console War Xbox Series X|S vs PlayStation 5

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Può darsi che per la versione oldgen siano andati di asset estremamente low quality (e quindi leggeri come file size) per essere sicuri al 100% che giri bene? Ma è una sparata mia, bisognerebbe vedere il peso su One e SeX :asd:
E' in sviluppo da 9 anni, è tipo il titolo che ha subito lo sviluppo più travagliato in questo decennio.


(dopo halo) :shrek:
 
La mia onesta reazione è stata ah allora Dead Island 2 è tornato. :asd:

Btw vi siete persi la notizia più eclatante: i presunti 155 gb per jedi survivor. :segnormechico:
 

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ci si compra una seconda serie S come memoria esterna.

beh i recommended non sono manco così esosi, ci rientro agile (DLSS farà il boost necessario per maxarlo), ma quei 155GB sono un offesa all'intelligenza umana (5 cent che su Ps5 peserà la metà, anche perchè non ci saranno gli asset high/ultra)
 
Ci sta essere amareggiati per il supporto only next gen non così esaltante come mera quantità di titoli, però sembra che ci siamo già dimenticati che fino a pochi mesi fa c'era un grosso problema scorte e che il primo anno e mezzo di next gen era una corsa ai bagarini o gruppi telegram per beccare la console in qualche negozio online venduta solo in bundle :asd: Il lancio di ps5 e series è stato parecchio anomalo come condizioni
 
Ne se i 155 GB di Jedi Survivor son confermati anche su console, direi che una Serie XL serve in tutti i sensi.
 
Risposte di Sony e MS all'addendum della CMA di Marzo (quello dove è stata fatta decadere la Teoria del Rischio per il Mercato Console)
The CMA published the responses to the addendum PF:

- Microsoft (6 pages)

The Provisional Findings Addendum confirms that Microsoft's incentives in relation to Activision content cannot be extrapolated from past conduct. The recognition that, in fact, Microsoft's past actions were not good evidence of any incentive to foreclose must also mean that the CMA should revisit its incentive analysis in relation to Theory of Harm 2 (cloud game streaming), which is focussed on qualitative evidence. At the same time, this should also cause the CMA to re-assess the current evidence available to it relating to Microsoft's incentives in relation to cloud game streaming.

The qualitative factors on which the CMA relies to question Microsoft's incentives to withhold more generally have been re-assessed and ultimately dismissed. The CMA has not undertaken any comparable exercise quantifying incentives in relation to Theory of Harm 2 as it did for Theory of Harm 1. The absence of that analysis does not somehow make the qualitative evidence in relation to Theory of Harm 2 stronger. Indeed, the absence of any, even broad, profitability analysis to support Theory of Harm 2 further undermines the conclusions. As has been explained to the CMA, [REDACTED].

The qualitative evidence available to the CMA in fact shows that Microsoft has entered into agreements with NVIDIA, Boosteroid and Ubitus, pursuant to which the distribution of Activision content on multiple cloud gaming services is provided for, should the Merger proceed. Not only does this show that Microsoft has no ability to withhold Activision content from rival cloud gaming services (given the presence of legally binding and enforceable agreements with these providers), it is also clear evidence of Microsoft's intention not to withhold Activision content from other cloud gaming services. Any analysis of both Microsoft's ability and incentive should be updated accordingly to reflect this development. Simply put, the CMA has found no incentive to withhold Activision content in relation to console, and the evidence shows it should reach the same conclusion in relation to cloud game streaming.


- Sony (10 pages)

The CMA's reversal of its position on its consoles theory of harm is surprising, unprecedented, and irrational.

The Addendum takes a diametrically opposite approach and focuses almost exclusively on a single economic model on which it places "significantly more weight" than other available evidence.

In conclusion, SIE respectfully submits that the Addendum does not justify the CMA's U-turn on the consoles theory of harm. The revised LTV model is vitiated by errors that bias the model to finding no incentive to Microsoft to foreclose. The Addendum jettisons, without sound reason, the PFs' thorough analysis of other evidence establishing Microsoft's incentives. And the Addendum's partial foreclosure discussion is based on pure speculation, rather than evidence. To reach a robust decision, the CMA should revisit its analysis of Microsoft's incentives and partial foreclosure, correcting for the errors identified in this paper.


- Joost Rietveld, Associate Professor of Strategy and Entrepreneurship UCL School of Management, in London (23 pages)

Disclaimer and disclosure: This submission was prepared after the CMA announced it would narrow the scope of its investigation to cloud gaming. Given the very short timeframe to prepare the submission it might contain some errors, all of which are my own. I am involved as an advisor or expert witness in a couple of gaming- related matters, including a recent consultancy role with Microsoft Corporation. This submission, however, was not commissioned or influenced by Microsoft in any way. All views expressed here are my own.

Cloud Gaming Is Not A Distinct Market

A Typology of Cloud Gaming Services and What It Means for Microsoft's Proposed Acquisition of Activision Blizzard

There exists significant ambiguity as to whether cloud gaming should be considered a distinct market or not. The CMA's final decision on whether to block or clear Microsoft's proposed acquisition of Activision Blizzard hinges in large part on this very question. Here, I have put forward the argument that we cannot combine all cloud gaming services into a single, clearly defined market definition. Rather, we can identify four types of gaming services that each use and rely on cloud streaming technology in different ways.

Microsoft's Game Pass offers cloud streaming as a feature; cloud gaming is an ingredient to a much broader value proposition that also includes natively run games as well as other services. Cloud-gaming-as- a-feature services arguably do not compete against cloud-gaming-as-a-complement (e.g., NVIDIA's GeForce Now, Boosteroid) and cloud-gaming-as-an-input services (e.g., Ubitus, GameStream) due to their more specialized offerings and differences in target customers. Microsoft arguably does compete against cloud-gaming-as-a-platform services such as Amazon's Luna and Blacknut—though not so much because they both stream games from the cloud, but rather because they both provide consumer-facing video game distribution platforms to overlapping customer bases.

To date, however, Activision Blizzard has not released any of its internally-developed video games on any of the cloud-gaming-as-a- platform services. Moreover, several cloud-gaming-as-a-platform services have ceased operations as this type of service has generally struggled to gain traction with consumers.

Consumers' willingness-to-pay for standalone cloud gaming services apparently is low and this is perhaps the strongest indication that cloud gaming should not be considered a distinct market: Cloud streaming is a potentially promising distribution method that will very likely continue to be used and relied upon to various extents by different companies with different offerings aimed at a diverse set of customers that can be both end users and business-to- business customers.

It behooves the CMA—and other agencies—to view it as such.
Fonte
 
Jim Ryan
Any degradation in the price, performance, or quality of play on PlayStation or any delays on release would quickly harm SIE's reputation and cause a loss of engagement and of players. As SIE's CEO, Jim Ryan, explained to the CMA at the Remedies Hearing, if PlayStation received a degraded version of Call of Duty, it would "seriously damage our reputation. Our gamers would desert our platform in droves and network effects would exacerbate the problem. Our business would never recover."
:shrek:
 
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